A painting by Gustav Klimt has sold for a record-breaking $236.4 million (£179.7 million) with fees, making it the second most expensive artwork ever sold at auction and the most expensive work of modern art sold at auction.
The six-foot-tall painting, titled âPortrait of Elisabeth Ledererâ, was painted by the Austrian painter between 1914 and 1916 and shows Lederer, a young heiress and daughter of Klimtâs patrons, draped in a Chinese robe.
Six bidders battled for 20 minutes at the Sothebyâs auction on Tuesday night in New York. Sothebyâs declined to identify the successful buyer of the painting.
Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer was looted by the Nazis and nearly destroyed in a fire during the second world war, but in 1948 it was returned to Ledererâs brother Erich, who was a frequent subject of drawings and paintings by Klimtâs friend and fellow artist Egon Schiele. It remained in Erichâs possession for most of his life, until he sold it in 1983, two years before his death.
In 1985 the painting became part of the private art collection of Estée Lauder heir Leonard A Lauder, who displayed it in his Fifth Avenue home in New York but for brief periods when it was lent to galleries. Lauder died in June, aged 92.
Art historian Emily Braun, who worked as Lauderâs art adviser for nearly four decades, told CNN that the painting was the jewel of his collection.
âHe ate lunch whenever he was at home, and lunch would be at a little round table right by the painting,â Braun said.
The painting was one of just two full-length Klimt portraits that remain in private hands.
It was predicted before Tuesday that the Klimt painting would sell for more than $150 million. But it smashed expectations to represent more than 40 percent of the total value of Lauderâs collection, which fetched $575.5 million with fees.
The sale of Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer sets a new record for a Klimt painting at auction, surpassing the $108 million record set by the sale of Lady with a Fan in 2023.
In 2006, Lauderâs brother Ronald paid $135 million in a private sale, rather than at auction, for Klimtâs famous Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer 1, widely known as Woman in Gold.
The most expensive artwork ever sold at auction was Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci, which sold in 2017 for US $450.3 million in 2017.
After the auction of Lauderâs collection on Tuesday night, Sothebyâs proceeded with a wider auction of modern art that included a solid gold, fully functional toilet satirising the ultrarich.
The 101kg, 18-karat-gold toilet, titled America, was made by Maurizio Cattelan, the provocative Italian artist known for taping a banana to a wall and selling it for $5.2 million. But on Tuesday, his gold toilet received only a single bid that met the asking price of $10 million, or $12.1 million with fees.
Cattelan created two solid gold toilets in 2016. The other was displayed in 2016 at New Yorkâs Guggenheim Museum, which pointedly offered to lend it to US president Donald Trump when he asked to borrow a Van Gogh painting. It was later stolen while on display in England at Blenheim Palace.
Two men were convicted in the toilet heist, but the loo was never found. Investigators believe it probably was broken up and melted down.
Cattelan has said that his gold toilets satirise superwealth, once saying: âWhatever you eat, a $200 lunch or a $2 hot dog, the results are the same, toilet-wise.â
By Sian Cain
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